A Good Question Needs a Great Answer

Professional Musicians most popular request!

After performing for three New Year’s Eve concerts, led by an amazing conductor and surrounded by eighty highly trained musicians, the volunteer usher asked “So, is this a professional orchestra?”  If the multiple standing ovations, the program filled with the biographies of the award winning soloists and the $65 ticket prices wasn’t enough to make it clear that it was indeed a professional music ensemble, then there must have been another question or two that needed to be asked and answered:  “Can you make a living playing music or do you have a ‘real’ job?”  Maybe the misunderstanding is complicated by the fact that professional musicians GET to do what they love and get paid to do it.  We understand that people appreciate what we do even if they don’t understand what it is that we do.

The great answer is that YES! We do make a very good living playing music and YES! it is a real job with real taxes and bills to be paid just like everyone else with a “real” job.  As professional musicians, we are held to the music industry’s highest of standards – we not only have to play each note perfectly but we also have to have experience for many other events as well.  If only our music teachers had told us that we could make our living at this and have this much fun, we swear we would have practiced more!

 

Instrumental Instruction Insights

Don’t be flat – stay sharp with music lessons!

Professional musicians hear from their audience members about the time they too played an instrument.  The majority of them also say that they wished their parents hadn’t let them quit!  Others wish they could play an instrument now but that they are “too old” to learn.  The good news is that as an adult, you learn faster and understand the concepts quicker than the children do.  The difference is that the adult student expects to be as good as the teacher after one lesson…okay, maybe two!  There are numerous studies that prove that learning to play an instrument is good for you on many levels.

Here are the questions professional musicians hear from adults wanting to learn:  What do I do first?  How do I find a teacher?  Which instrument should I pick?  Is it expensive?  The first thing to do is to keep it simple and commit to it for 6 weeks – that’s it!  As for a teacher, there is a saying “when the student is ready, the teacher will appear”.  Which instrument?  You probably already have the answer and it is neither right nor wrong.

And the best part is priceless – You will be amazed at what you learn about yourself!!

Without Making a Sound…

It’s possible to have fun with music without playing a note!

One of the ways to express harmony is with “note-worthy” expressions AND you can do it without making a sound!  You can attend a concert, listen to music or donate your time and/or money to a favorite ensemble.  Most professional musicians would agree that hearing that you attended and enjoyed their performances is music to their ears.

So go ahead and “like” us on Facebook or applaud loud and long at the next live concert – it is never expected but greatly appreciated!

“Do you practice?” Depends…

 

Mastering the music makes musicians merry!

Happy Tuesday, January 2nd!

There are many questions asked of professional musicians:  How long have you been playing?  About 15 minutes.  Is that a Stradivarius?  If it isn’t, I just blew $50 bucks!  And the #1 question is…do you practice?  When you are studying with a teacher of your chosen instrument, the answer is YES!  When you are a professional musician, you have mastered the technical aspects of the instrument.  Therefore, professional musicians “rehearse” the music put in front of them so that they can have command over the music, not the instrument.  Yesterday’s string-changing for the violin and viola was a success!

In other words, doctors and lawyers “practice”…musicians “play” and violinists just “fiddle” around!

Thanks for “tuning” in…

Happy New Year 2018!

Welcome to “A Day in the Life of a Strolling Violinist” !  This is the first of 365 daily posts about the comings and goings of a professional musician.  New Year’s Day at Strings of Silk Music will involve resting up from 3 New Year’s Eve Concerts yesterday with the New Philharmonic Orchestra at the McAninch Arts Center on the campus of the College of DuPage in Glen Ellyn, Illinois.

The weather is very cold and dry here in the Chicagoland area today so the humidity will need to be monitored as well as replacing some very worn out strings from a very busy performance schedule for December 2017.

 

Best wishes for a happy              and healthy 2018!

The Amazing Grace of My Aunt Madeline

The Amazing Grace of My Aunt Madeline

Last Friday, surrounded by family in her home in Culver City, Madeline Ehrlich lost her two-month fight with lymphoma and leukemia.  She was born in the small town of Putnam, CT, the sixth child of eight brothers and sisters.  After graduating from the Cook County School of Nursing, she became a registered nurse and worked in a few of our country’s busiest and most interesting Emergency Rooms:  Cook County in Chicago, Bellevue in New York, and County Hospital in Los Angeles.

She met her husband, Paul, 43 years ago, when they both lived in the same apartment building in Santa Monica. They married less than six months after they met.  Shortly thereafter, they moved to Culver City which they grew to love.  Madeline became involved in every campaign for City Council, School Board and other voting measures over the past four decades.  Madeline was deeply passionate about education and language immersion.  She has a long list of accomplishments, including being a founding member of the Culver City Education Foundation, and founding Advocates for Language Learning, which put on the first national conference promoting language immersion.

She was elected to serve on the School Board from 1991-1995. While she was President of the School Board, she helped re-open El Marino Elementary School as a dedicated language school and kick off the Japanese immersion program.

Madeline will be sorely missed and survived by her husband, Paul; her children and their spouses, Steven Ehrlich, Amy and Rick Dennis, Heidi and Bryan O’Bra, and her grandchildren Asara and Kai.

Madeline will also be survived by her great nephew, Austin, and niece, Ariel, for whom she and Paul served as foster parents for the past 2½ years. They also were the unofficial foster aunt and uncle of Josh, who has been living with them since last November.

Everyone who knew her would agree that Madeline was a force of nature — defined by her sense of generosity, compassion, wisdom, determination, civic duty, and humor.  You may evoke her memory by doing an unexpected act of kindness for someone less fortunate.  Madeline’s Celebration of Life will be held at the Vets Building in the Auditorium (corner of Overland Avenue and Culver Boulevard on Sunday from 3 o’clock to 5.  

So full of grace and love.

If you would like to make a donation in her honor, we would sincerely appreciate your contributions to either of the following: Advocates for Language Learning (ALLEM) (www.allelmarino.org/) or the Karabo Asara (KA) Orphan Centre (www.gofundme.com/8g6x5uv6k ) which she contributed to founding in South Africa. In the last few months of her life, Madeline was instrumental in helping to create a quilt for the Culver City Centennial celebration which will be permanently displayed in City Hall. We will be collecting cash donations for the quilt frame, ALLEM or KA at her Celebration of Life on Sunday.